In a flat above a restaurant in Covent Garden, an investigative reporter called Clare and a tribesman from Borneo covered in tattoos prepare to transmit their daily revolutionary radio broadcast deep into the Borneo jungle.

This astonishing documentary by Cambodian journalist Thet Sambath, whose entire family was killed by the Khmer Rouge, gets as near as anyone has done to discovering how and why the killing fields happened.

Tests have uncovered oil leaks in three Rolls-Royce engines on Qantas' grounded Airbus A380s, the airline's chief executive officer said, as engineers tried to zero in on the cause of an engine failure on board one of the carrier's superjumbo jets.

Fighting between ethnic minority rebels and Burmese government troops has sent at least 10,000 refugees across the border into Thailand after a widely criticised election that is expected to usher in a parliament sympathetic to the military regime.

The One&Only Le Saint Géran in Mauritius was not my first experience of a luxury resort. Twenty years ago I was backpacking around the barren Bahias de Huatulco in Mexico with a school friend when we came upon an enormous Club Med shimmering across a deserted bay. We swam over, scaled a wall and dropped down into a samba party where a man in an Arnie mask handed us rum cocktails and directed us to the free food. For two days we feasted unchecked, judged a dirty joke competition, joined in the Club Med conga and learned how to windsurf. Greed in the gift shop was our undoing. We were handcuffed and spent a tense hour in the local jail, but my taste for the resort de luxe was born.